WT Business Beat

By Nick Wakeman

Nick picks his four top trends

I’ve been asked to speak to a group next week that will include investors in the government market, as well as executives from government contractors.

I’m a bit nervous, to be honest. My usual speaking role is as a moderator, so I get to set the stage, do introductions and ask questions.

But my role will be reversed this time. They want me to prepare about 15 minutes worth of remarks and then take questions.

I’ve decided to focus on four issues, or more precisely, questions, that are outstanding in the market today.

I don’t have a position on these questions for the most part, but I think they are important topics worth paying attention to over the next two to three years. I want to float these out to everyone to see if I’m on the right track, and if I’m missing anything that’s a bigger deal. You'll notice sequestration isn't among them.

Question 1: The long-term impact of low-price, technically acceptable contracting. How will this affect the health of government contractors, as well as the quality of work that is being done for the government? I think the answer can be both positive and negative.

It’ll be positive where customers and contractors both understand that value can still play a role in the equation. And that will depend on the definition of technically acceptable.

The negative answer will be where the customer’s focus is squarely on price at the expense of everything else.

Question 2: How will the contractor-customer relationship improve? To hear many people describe it, the relationship between contractors and the government is at an all-time low. You have bid protests, audits, constant pricing pressures and a general atmosphere of distrust.

Probably the best cure is a better educated and trained government workforce. Experience is critical, too. This will take time, so it might be years before there is improvement here.

Question 3: Cloud computing. While I believe cloud computing is here to stay, and has tremendous potential, will it become the go to business model for government agencies? And if so, how will that change the business models of government contractors?

Right now, it seems most of the large contractors have established cloud lines of business, but will they reach a tipping point where cloud or everything as a service is their primary business?

Question 4: Public markets versus private equity. We’ve seen two phenomenons in recent years – public companies being taken private, such as SRA International and Sotera. We’ve also seen private equity swooping in and being the buyer of large spinouts of companies, such as TASC and the SI Organization. And we’ve seen the stock of public companies struggle.

There are myriad reasons: slower growth, tighter margins, the draw in Iraq and in Afghanistan. It has been hard for public companies to meet those quarterly expectations. It’s also driven them to streamline, and perhaps make deeper cuts than is really healthy.

But private equity has a different investment model, and the strong cash flow and predictable customer-base that government contractors have continue to make this market a good place to invest.

My question is what impact will this have on the market? More acquisitions? Less acquisitions? A re-emergence of a strong mid-tier? None of the above?

Those are my four talking points that I think will get me through my 15 minutes. Hard to tell what the questions will be, but I’ve never been shy about saying I don’t know. I’m hoping I’ll get some feedback from the audience on what they think.

But right now I want your feedback. Am I on a good track? What would your four talking points be?

Reader Comments

Sat, Oct 20, 2012
Buck Ozment
Ozment & Associates

Sun, Oct 7, 2012
Tom Suder
Washington, DC 20176

How about mobility? This area has the ability to change the way government does business internally as well to the citizens through saving money and increasing work output.

Sat, Oct 6, 2012
Jaime Gracia

Questions 1 and 2 are, for me, at the center of the current trend in fraud, waste, and abuse that seem to go unabated and spiraling out of control. Due to the deterioration of the skills and capabilities of the acquisition workforce (I include program managers), you see the results that affect everything else. These poor outcomes manifest themselves in poor requirements, poor contract management, poor outcomes, and overall waste. The further lack of any accountability is also troubling, as everyone seems to be shrugging their shoulders. Effective leadership needs to step up and take control of the situation, and provide the accountability down to the the CO, PM, and CS level for results. Providing the foundation for effective communications with industry is also an effective initiative, but "MythBusters" lost focus with the need to cut contracts and spending.
Small business contracting and opportunities, and the lack therefore, would be another important topic for me.

Fri, Oct 5, 2012
Ed
Colorado

Nick, these are all good, but given your audience, in question 4, it would be good to address foreign investment. Investing equity firms that include foreign investors and board members can in some cases negatively impact the performance of the newly acquired company. If the company's Fed work is with the military or intelligence community, the attainment of FOCI could be delayed for years, or worse not granted at all. In most cases even if FOCI is granted, it comes with 'conditions' that are not favorable for the company to win future classified work with Defense or IC clients.

Fri, Oct 5, 2012
Bill
Ohio

Nick, great topics, all important and I agree with several of the posters above. However, don't make the same mistake which several of our 535 Senate and House politicians are; you cannot ignore sequestration. Sequestration itself in the short term is important, but that can will most likely be kicked slightly down the road for a year. The real "trend" is the systemic overspending by our government and the crushing debt our country is carrying. The cut backs in spending highlighted by the sequestration tipping point are inevitable and cannot be ignored in the long term. The real question no one wishes to ask is how will our industry look and how will government and industry react to massive spending cuts in the not-to-distant future. All of your points may take a different look inside the limited spending framework.

What is your e-mail address?

Do you have a password?

Trending

In an exclusive for WT Insider members, we are collecting all of the contract awards we cover into a database that you can sort by contractor, agency, value and other parameters. You can also download it into a spreadsheet. Our databases track awards back to 2013.
Read More